
“Art is not about what you see—it’s about what you feel.”
My work is built on that idea. I call my approach Exact Abstract: I bring my subjects as close to real as possible, then break them open into abstraction.
I often begin with what looks almost like a traditional, representational painting—an athlete, a figure, a face, a moment in time. I push the drawing, the anatomy, the light, and the structure until it’s exact enough that you can recognize it instantly. That precision is my foundation.
Then the real work begins.
Once the subject feels real and solid, I start to deconstruct it. Edges dissolve, forms stretch, colors intensify. Realistic contours give way to gestural marks and abstract planes. The subject is still there, but now it exists in two worlds at once: the world of what you see and the world of what you feel.
My artistic practice is rooted in the belief that this fusion—exactness breaking into abstraction—offers a direct pathway to emotional truth. Where traditional realism anchors you in the familiar, and pure abstraction can feel untethered, Exact Abstract sits in the tension between the two. You recognize the subject, but you experience the emotion.
My process begins with emotion as much as with form. Whether I’m processing a personal challenge, celebrating a breakthrough, or capturing the intensity of human perseverance, I channel those feelings first into a realistic structure, then into abstraction layered on top of (and through) that structure. The result is not decorative abstraction, but work that carries genuine psychological weight—pieces with depth, history, and meaning.
I’ve always been drawn to the tension between control and chaos. The “exact” phase of my work is about control: measured lines, careful composition, disciplined observation. The “abstract” phase is about release: spontaneous gestures, intuitive decisions, and moments that could never be planned in advance. This dance between the intentional and the accidental mirrors life itself—the balance between planning and adapting, discipline and freedom.
My color choices are intuitive yet deliberate. I work primarily with bold, saturated hues that command attention and evoke strong emotional responses. Red represents passion and energy; blue suggests depth and introspection; yellow captures optimism and illumination. In my Exact Abstract works, these colors move across and through the underlying realistic forms, overlapping, contrasting, and harmonizing to create visual movement and emotional resonance.
As I continue to evolve as an artist, I’m increasingly interested in the intersection of art, culture, and value—how a work functions in contemporary society, how it becomes a collectible object, and how it can serve as both personal expression and cultural artifact. My limited‑edition releases and collector‑focused approach reflect this interest, creating opportunities for serious collectors to engage with my work in meaningful, long‑term ways.
My ultimate goal is to create art that endures—pieces that will be collected, studied, and appreciated for generations. I believe the most powerful art comes from authentic expression, and I’m committed to maintaining that authenticity regardless of trends or external pressure.
Every Exact Abstract canvas I create is a piece of my story: a real subject, made exact, then transformed into an emotional landscape—offered to collectors who recognize the value of art that truly matters.
